
Always looking to one-up his little bro, Brooks has promised the avid small-time gamers an epic night, far beyond their usual menu of charades, trivia and Pictionary. So, minutes later, when armed thugs break down the door and drag him away, bound and gagged, his guests are duly impressed by how realistic the fight seemed, how terrified Brooks had looked, and how menacing his assailants were. They can hardly believe it was all staged.
Maybe that’s because it wasn’t.
Or was it? Sharp, fast and unpredictable, Game Night is a full-on comedy with a fresh approach: shot like an action thriller from the first punch to the last reveal, it aims to keep audiences not only laughing…but guessing. “Some of our favorite films are ones that blend multiple genres, so that audiences go from a laugh to a gasp in a single scene,” says Jonathan Goldstein, who directed Game Night in tandem with longtime creative collaborator John Francis Daley.

As one mystery turns into another and nothing is guaranteed, Max, Annie and their friends are propelled through an insane night of dead ends and double-crosses, fight clubs and shootouts, all the while chasing and being chased, and facing danger that could be either real or imagined—or both.
Having established the three couples at the outset, “Game Night” sends them on divergent paths immediately after Brooks is hustled away to God-knows-where and lets the story follow their parallel—and occasionally intersecting—progress. Says Daley, “We wanted to capture the frenzy inherent in murder mystery parties. Each of our couples is incredibly competitive, and there’s no better way to portray that than splitting them up and intercutting their game-playing tactics. It allows us to focus on their dynamic as couples as well as their individual storylines.”

In Philippine cinemas March 14, Game Night is a New Line Cinema presentation and distributed in the Philippines by Warner Bros. Pictures, a Warner Bros. Entertainment company.
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